.@omnissiuntone Asked school to make sure stories were age-appropriate & to try to avoid presenting genocide as a good thing.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
And yet most kids aren't traumatised by the story of Noah's ark.
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Replying to @omnissiuntone
No, her best friend wasn't. It worried her for months every time it rained. It needs careful presentation as myth.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
Not sure this is meaningful. 6-yr-olds are scared easily and unreasonably. I assume she wasn't taught another flood was likely?
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Replying to @omnissiuntone @HPluckrose
Age appropriateness might be legit. concern, but harm of child's misunderstanding not intrinsic to rel. teaching
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Replying to @omnissiuntone
More importantly, don't tell kids its true! Kids are told their teachers know what they're talking about!
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Replying to @HPluckrose
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@omnissiuntone A child does not *misunderstand* religious teaching if she's told it's true & accepts it's true. She's been misled!2 replies 1 retweet 4 likes -
Replying to @HPluckrose
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@omnissiuntone If it were true that a genocidal God existed & were watching her, terror perfectly rational response! Don't tell kids that!2 replies 0 retweets 3 likes -
Replying to @HPluckrose
Reasonable or not, interpretation of God as genocidal is not one most Xtians subscribe to, nor how chn interpret Noah's ark
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Replying to @omnissiuntone
I am going to leave it here. No point telling me kids aren't frightened by God stories when I've met so many who are.
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In addition, there is no justification for teaching kids that a god is real in schools until some reason to think it true.
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